Luxembourg prime minister's party wins most votes

By RAF CASERT Associated Press

Posted:
10/20/2013 05:30:43 AM PDT

Updated:
10/20/2013 01:59:54 PM PDT

Click photo to enlarge

Leader of the Christian Democrat party Jean-Claude Juncker speaks with the media at his election headquarters in Luxembourg on Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. The Christian Democrat party of long-serving Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker easily remained the biggest party and the first choice to form a new coalition government following the first provisional results of Sunday's elections.

LUXEMBOURG—The Christian Democrat party of long-serving Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker easily remained the biggest party and the first choice to form a new coalition government following Sunday's elections.

With near complete results, Juncker's CSV will drop almost 4.5 points from the 38 percent of the 2009 elections, but remains well ahead of both Socialist coalition partner LSAP, which hovered just over 20 percent and the opposition Liberal DP, which made a big move up to 18.5 percent.

Juncker, who is the longest-serving government leader in the 28-nation European Union with a reign going back to 1995, could both form a center-left or center-right government, or face a grand coalition against him of Liberals-Socialist-Greens.

"I am satisfied with the results as far as my party remains the No. 1 party in Luxembourg, with a huge distance between my party and the two other main political parties," Juncker said. "We should be entitled to form the next government."

The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, which borders France and Germany, has about 515,000 inhabitants. It's a founding member of the European Union and a major financial center, giving it clout well beyond the size of its population. Juncker was head of the eurogroup of nations that share the EU's common currency between 2005 and early this year.

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Often a picture of sedate bourgeois conservatism, Luxembourg was shocked into snap elections this summer after Juncker failed to contain a spying scandal centering on allegations of eavesdropping and wiretapping on politicians and the keeping of files on ordinary citizens and leading figures dating back to the Cold War.

There also were allegations that state money was used to pay for cars and apartments being used by the small country's security service. Juncker was not implicated, but his coalition partner, the Socialists, told him to take political responsibility and he called the early election.

The scandal punished Juncker's party but it could have been worse. The CSV was expected to drop from 26 to 23 seats in the 60-seat legislature.

Projections show both the LSAP and DP with 13 seats and the Greens with six.

"As a party we don't have a preference as far as the coalition partners are concerned. We do not have exclusive views on that," Juncker said.